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Florida AIA Award of Excellence for Africa Windmill Project

June 30th, 2009 John No comments

John Drake, AIA enabled Guy Butler Architect to win a 2009 Florida American Institute of Architects Award of Excellence for Africa Windmill Project

The actual windmill project was built in March 2009 when John Drake, vice president with GBA and Bill Salter, Senior Design Architect with GBA, went to Malawi Africa with two friends to build a windmill in the Village of Mgwayi.  The windmill was designed to be built out of locally found materials in a rural village to irrigate crops during the region’s punishing eight month dry season.

The idea for a sustainable windmill for the small farmer was conceived when John was in Malawi, Africa a year and a half ago, and noticed remote farming villages had hand-dug wells, with no means of pumping water.  During a drought Malawi does not produce enough food to support its population; 94% of farms rely on the natural three-month rainy season, which only allows one growing season per year.  Farmers, with Malawi’s temperate climate and the means to ‘pump’ water for crop irrigation, would have the opportunity to produce crops year round regardless of droughts.  Modern irrigation equipment is too expensive for villagers and impossible to maintain, since they do not have tools or training.  Most agriculture in Malawi is composed of individual subsistence farmers with small one acre farms. 

The design solution evolved over a year and a half of trial and error and is based upon the panemone windmill (500AD Persia) connected to a rope and washer pump.  This enables crop irrigation and only utilizes materials that are readily available in Malawi to the common farmer.  The windmill is made of a main wood post, bamboo, wire, grain sacks, and two stones for the main bearing; and the pump is made of rope, bottle caps, hand-cut rubber washers (out of used bicycle tubes), and PVC thin walled pipe.  The total cost for the windmill if all the parts are bought is $40 US dollars and it could irrigate a minimum of ¼ acre which yields $100-$125 US dollars at harvest, so within the first harvest the rural farmer will be able to make a profit.  Sustainable irrigation will stabilize the region of Southern Africa’s food supply which is a matter of Life and Death in Malawi.

The Spa at Belek Golf Club

June 12th, 2009 Guy No comments

Belek Golf Club would not be complete without the services and amenities of The Spa. The styling on this part of the resort is a little different from the rest, creating a place to get away from everything and relax in complete comfort.

The Spa takes advantage of a “U” shape which creates a relaxing outdoor courtyard garden. The “open” end provides access to the pool areas.

The Spa contains various pool locations, exercise facilities, and an outdoor Grill Restaurant.

There is also a professionally staffed Golf Academy and Driving Range adjacent to the Spa.

Within the Spa, there  is a traditional Turkish Hammam. It is sometimes referred to as a Turkish Bath. The tradition of the Hammam goes way back into Turkish history, and the design details are many and exacting.

Many resorts around the world have what they are calling Hammams, but in fact they are just glorified steam rooms.

In Turkey, nothing less than a “real” Hammam is acceptable. It consists of three separate areas, each providing a specific function, with a cooling off, social, gathering space at the end of the experience. In the traditions of Turkey, visiting the Hammam is as much a social activity as it is a personal, relaxing, and reflective journey.

To the South of The Spa is a world class amenity area with several pools, hot tubs, and swim-up bar.

The sustainable transportation system is once again evidenced here by way of canal boats in the waterway docked at the Amenity Pavilion.

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Other Units at Belek Golf Club

June 12th, 2009 Guy No comments

The Castle Villas at Belek Golf Club might be out of the range of most so there are a variety of home styles for all tastes and budgets.  All multi-family homes are located in a triple tier around the site which affords everyone either a waterway or golf course view.

Named after traditional Turkish symbols, the units are named: Carnation, Olive, Orchid, Ottoman and Tulip.

The Ottoman architectural styles of Turkey provide inspiration for the design adapted to modern codes and indigenous building materials.

This region of Turkey is known as “the cradle of civilization”.  The architectural styles of Turkey are varied and go back thousands of years. The resort design has to appeal to international visitors by creating the ambiance of Turkish tradition without sacrificing the comforts and technology available in the 21st. Century.

An important aspect of the multi-family design is that each unit must look like one large home. Given the large number of units, great care has been taken to avoid creating the usual look that accompanies multi-family development. The styling creates the feel of large Manor Homes around the undulating terrain of the Golf Course.

As the few residences in Turkey that dock on water are found mostly in the extremely affluent estates along the Bosphorus River, the docks and water access add to the exclusive nature of all resort homes.

Another important facet of the multi-family designs allows varied numbers of units in each structure. For example, the modular Olive could consist of four units, three units, or it could even be a single family home. This way, real estate conditions are not constrained by the design.

Using sustainable design strategies for energy efficiency, the Villas promote healthy living through the use of large outdoor living rooms.  These take advantage of cross ventilation. Large roof overhangs enhance both summer shade and winter sunlight.

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The Castle Units at Belek Golf Club

June 12th, 2009 Guy 3 comments

The iconic center-piece of Belek Golf Club is a castellated village.   With a predominantly flat topography, the design of luxurious four-story castle villas appear as hilltop residences.  From the surrounding golf course, the castle villas’ lower two-stories are within a perimeter wall faced with battered stone and punctured with light wells.  The upper two floors step back to form the appearance of hilltop residences.  Within the hilltop village, on the third level, a streetscape and series of plazas create a pedestrian friendly environment and the formal entrances to each of the villas.

Their design reflects the traditional look of very affluent homeowners from Europe, the Middle East, and Russia. Their exclusive nature provides the final touch, that entices international wealth to invest in resort membership.

Within the hilltop village, on the third level, a streetscape and series of plazas create a pedestrian friendly environment for the formal entrances to each of the villas. The Castle Villa central courtyard can only accessed by Castle owners for security purposes and provides an exclusive social space for leisure activity as well as a place for  international business relationships to develop in a unique and relaxed atmosphere.

The Castle Villa interiors are styled to appeal to these same international tastes, and create a place for one of a kind real estate investment.

GBA was responsible for both interior and exterior concepts of the entire Resort project, however, the prestigious designers at Georgio Armani have been approached to add their special touches to the castle units.

Southern Turkey has a wonderful climate, similar to Florida, along with a critical mass of high quality Golf Courses.  As such, the Castle Villas are aimed at the specific, sophisticated client who might already own several such homes around the World and wishes to “follow the sun” with his or her lifestyle.

Is Green Building new and expensive?

May 28th, 2009 John No comments

     Energy efficient architecture made with local materials has always been around since the beginning of construction.  Civilizations have always designed and built in response to their environment to make their daily lives more comfortable. Before the 1900’s, when alternating current became wide spread, all buildings were ‘off the electric grid’ and without air-conditioning.  So, before the 1900’s most buildings would have been considered ‘Green Buildings’, ‘Sustainable’, or ‘Carbon Neutral’ by today’s buzzword standards.  Things went awry in the United States when buildings designed for natural ventilation were retrofitted with central air-conditioning.  The buildings envelopes could not contain the conditioned air and became ‘energy hogs’.  The design response in the 60’s – 80’s was to tighten and insulate the new building envelope to create an engineered sealed box and ignore the natural environment.  While maintaining the interior temperature comfort of the occupants this design approach created the new problem of building related illness.  The EPA defines Sick Building Syndrome as “Term that refers to a set of symptoms that affect some number of building occupants during the time they spend in the building and diminish or go away during periods when they leave the building.”  In the 1990’s extensive studies were conducted on indoor air quality and modern construction’s impact on the environment.  Multiple design performance standards and guidelines were created by various government agencies, trade associations, and non-profit agencies.  In 1994 the Green Building Council began to develop the LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) rating system to provide an organized way to determine which standards should be used with various building types and also assigned a point rating system to the various standards to evaluate their impact on the environment.  The expensive new green building technology grabs the news, however just about any well designed building can meet the basic LEED certification without exotic technology.  Also, a misunderstanding about green building is that buildings cannot be designed to be more energy efficient and environmentally friendly without the additional cost of being submitted for LEED certification.  Most of our clients are not concerned with the marketing potential of LEED certification of their buildings, but are interested in inexpensively cutting their long-term energy and maintenance cost with proper building design.  Finally an additional misunderstanding is an energy efficient building has to look like something from the future.  As mentioned earlier prior to the 1960’s buildings responded to their environmental context to keep their occupants comfortable in an energy efficient manner.